A
collection of stories, photos, art and information on Stalag Luft I

If you are a former Prisoner of War or a next of
kin of a POW, we invite you to sign and leave your email address so others that
come may find you. Please mention camp, compound, barracks and room numbers if
possible.

The seventh of May may not have particular meaning for you. Perhaps you
were not yet on this earth on May 7, 1945.

That was the day Nazi Germany - the 'thousand year Reich', as Adolf
Hitler boastfully called it surrendered to the Allies. The European phase of
World War II was over, and the day became known as VE-Day, for victory in
Europe.

Coleman D. Moberly, London citizen, attorney and U .S. Magistrate has
good reason to remember May 7, 1945.

When The Sentinel-Echo asked him to talk about his memories of World War
II, he at first was reluctant. But then, laconically and calmly as if these
were everyday events, he began to tell his story .

Moberly was born on a Laurel County farm near McWhorter, in 1920. When he was 12 the family moved to another farm, on what is now KY 490, then US
25.

"Our place was about one mile north of Hazel Green School, and I
graduated from the old Hazel Green High School in 1938. I played basketball
there, and was team captain." Moberly had one semester at Morehead (then a
state teachers college), and next semester entered Sue Bennett College,
graduating in 1940 with an elementary teachers certificate. He was captain
of the Sue Bennett basketball team which in '40 went to the finals of the
junior college tournament. He taught school for one year in Leslie County -
way in Leslie County. The school was on Lower Bad Creek. "You went on old 80
to Wooten, then 10 or 11 miles up Coon Creek, across Gray Mountain, to Bad
Creek. " Moberly returned to Laurel County and worked at Laurel Grocery
until September 1941, when he went to work at Reynolds Metals in Louisville,
making airplane parts. America was not yet in World War II, but the USA was
rearming, and turning out war materiel for the Allies. Three months after he
went to Louisville, Pearl Harbor was bombed and we were at war. Moberly
volunteered for the Army Air Corps (at that time the Air Corps was not a
separate branch of the service). but was not called up until February 1943.
He went to basic training and armory school near Denver, Col., and to
gunnery school at Las Vegas, Nev., then to Salt Lake City, where he was
assigned to a combat crew on a B-17 bomber. The B-17, the famed 'Flying
Fortress', carried a crew of ten. The pilot, co-pilot, navigator and
bombardier were officers; the radio operator, engineer, tail gunner, two
waist gunners and ball turret gunner were enlisted men. Everyone except the
pilot and co-pilot operated a machine gun. Moberly, assigned as a waist
gunner, was the lone Kentuckian on the crew. The others, he recalls, came
from Ohio, New Mexico, New York and Minnesota. They were assigned to the
463rd Bomber Group of the 15th Air Force, based in Foggia, Italy. They
arrived there via the 'southern route'

When asked about his impression of the Italians, Moberly smiled and said
he didn't get to meet any Italians. That was soon explained. On the next
day, March 17 he flew his first bombing mission. His crew was separated, so
that everyone would be flying with men who had experience on missions. It
was a cloudy day and the target was Vienna, Austria. As an armory gunner,
Moberly had to maintain the 50-caliber machine guns and also see that the
bombs were properly loaded. The type of bombs depended on the target. "If
you were bombing an army camp, the bombs were 500-pounders. If it was a big
target such as an aircraft factory, why, you'd be dropping 1,000 or
2,000-pound bombs. "

On the 18th, he flew his second mission, the target also somewhere in
Austria, he cannot remember the name of the place. On both missions, his
bomber group was attacked by German planes.

The engineer and radio operator from his original crew were on a plane
that went down on the second day.

"I never found out what happened, but the report was that no parachutes
were seen." On March 19 Moberly flew his third mission. The pilot,
navigator, bombardier and tail gunner were members of - his old crew.

"We took off around six a.m. We had a fighter escort, but after we got
out of Italy and reached what we called the - I.P.(Initial Point), they had
to turn back on account of fuel.

We were to be picked up there by another fighter escort to - take us to
the target and return. - The second escort never did arrive." What did
arrive was a group of German Messerschmitt 109s and Fokke-Wulfes. Moberly's
plane was hit and one engine knocked out. "The intercom was knocked out, so
we couldn't communicate with the pilot and co-pilot. " After we were hit
they salvoed the bombs." Moberly knew that because he felt the plane rise
from the loss of weight when the bombs were jettisoned. "The bomb-bay doors
were left open. All the officers had - left the plane - they were up- front
and in more direct communication with each other. The tail gunner had left
and the left waist gunner was gone. They'd done gone and we didn't know it
because the communication system was out. The plane was flying on automatic
pilot." The ball turret gunner then left his gun turret and climbed up in to
the body of the B-17.

"He had 40 missions. Fifty, you get to come home. He said we'd better
leave, and he went out first. I was the last one. . 'That was my first
parachute jump. We were at 22,000 feet. I counted to ten and pulled the cord
and it didn't work. I had to tear the chute open with my hands." When they
saw the chutes opening, Moberly said, the German planes left. "Instead of
regulation US flying suits (which were - electrically heated), we had been
issued British flying suits, wool jacket, wool pants, wool boots. They were
warm enough, but the boots had no straps and on the way down they fell off
my feet. I arrived on the ground in a mountainous area, I would compare it
to the area around Asheville, N.C..

"I was afraid of landing without boots, that I'd break my ankles, but the
chute caught in a small tree. Actually, I came in on my rear end. I landed
in an open area by the edge of a woods and I could see a house." He knew
they had been flying over Yugoslavia, and "We had been instructed that part
of Yugoslavia was occupied by Tito and his partisans. An intelligence
officer had briefed us that if we were shot down over Yugoslavia your best
bet was to try to go to a peasant's home and chances were they would be
guerilla underground and would assist you in getting back to Italy. "It was
about noon when I landed. I laid down in the woods until dark and then went
to the house. I was in stocking feet, and there was snow on the ground, so I
knew I had to have some shoes to get out of there. "So I went to the
peasant's house and they took me in. They couldn't speak English and I
couldn't speak Yugoslav or German or whatever they spoke there. There were
seven or eight kids and an old woman who I took to be his mother. They
seemed welcoming. I had a map in my clothes which showed the whole area (of
Europe.) The man, who was about forty, showed me where I was, and 1 showed
him Foggia.

"They gave me some dark bread and a bed tick and a blanket, and I made a
bed on the floor. The man indicated he'd take me through the mountains and
there'd be 'nine more', which led me to believe it was the crew.

"Next morning a bunch of women came in. They had white bread and cake.
About ten o'clock they brought me a pair of wooden shoes. I wore size 11 and
these were about a size-10.

"The man indicated he was taking me to meet the other nine. We started
walking, and three or four hours later we came out at a level field of six
or seven acres and were crossing that to a road. About halfway across the
field up came a squad of at least 25 or 30 men with rifles.

"I asked if it was Tito's army." He said, "Ya, ya, Tito." "When we got
within 30 or 40 feet of’ em, an officer stepped out and I saw he had an
armband with a swastika on it, and I knew I had been betrayed."

-Next week: Prisoner of War No.3743.

=====

Part 11 By Alice Cornett

In Part I, Coleman Moberly of London told of how the B-17 Bomber in which
he was a waist gunner was hit by fire from German planes on his third flying
mission. He parachuted into a mountainous area of Yugoslavia. Believing that
the peasant who took him in were friends, he was betrayed by them and turned
over to a squad of Germans waiting in an open field. "We walked about two
more hours, to a small town with a railroad station. They took me to Gestapo
headquarters, and the radio operator from the mission was there. I also saw
a boy. about 12, who was the son from the peasant's house.

(After he got to POW camp, Moberly learned there was a reward equal to
$50 in US money for Yugoslavs who turned in American soldiers" And they'd be
shot if they harbored Americans.") "Then they took us on a regular passenger
train, with two German guards, to Gratz, Austria and from there to a German
Army camp which appeared to be a basic training camp. They put us in the
post guardhouse.

And the rest of the crew was there, except for one man.

"The next morning they put us on another train and at midnight we arrived
in Frankfurt, Germany, where we were separated and put into single cells.
That was the night of March 21.

Two days before, the Americans had bombed Frankfurt all day and the
British all night - 36 hours continuous bombing - but the railroad yards
were back in operation."

Moberly paused before he talked about his interrogation in Frankfurt. "
As a prisoner of war," he said, "1 never did feel like that we wouldn't get
out. I figured Uncle Sam would come and get us. "But the German intelligence
was a very efficient organization. They interrogated us every day, and all
of the intelligence people that they had in the interviews were officers.
All spoke fluent English, and some said they had been in the United States
for 15 or 20 years - and they went back to Germany in '39 and couldn't
leave.

"The way -they approached you, they first came in with a Corporal. He
came in and accused you of being an American spy, not air force. "Of course
we had our dog tags. But they'd say anybody could get on an airplane and
bailout. Then they'd come at you with a form: list name, rank and serial
number - five or six pages long, your whole family tree, particularly if you
had any relatives in Germany. "Who was on your crew? What unit? Fifteenth in
Italy or Eighth in England? Where were you going? Type of bombs? What type
of airplane? "I just signed name, rank and serial number and just handed it
back to 'em. That's when they accused me of being a spy. "Finally they took
me four floors up. They had a full-scale model of every American aircraft
that we had in the European Theater of Operations. I told 'em they all
looked alike to me. "Before I left they came in and named everybody on the
crew. The only one they didn't know was our tail gunner , Johnson. Someone
had talked." "They also had a book that listed every group and squadron at
every airfield in the whole ETO, even down to the chaplains.

"'We know all about you', they said. And they had the groups in Foggia,
Italy, and typed in English. On the last page they had marked '463rd bomber
group' with pencil.

"Later, when I got in prison camp with the officers that I knew, I
told’em we had one man on our crew who was a yellow bastard. Lt.-----, who
was the co-pilot on March 19, his face turned red as a pickled beet. My
feeling was that he Was the one that gave the information.

"So finally the last officer I talked to said, 'Moberly, I've
interrogated a lot of American air force prisoners but you're the dumbest
blank-blank I've ever talked to. I said I was never known for being

too smart. Then this Corporal came back and said they'd decided I wasn't
a spy, that I was a genuine American and they'd send me to camp. Then we all
were taken to a barbed wire enclosure where we could mix." Moberly studied a
moment and said, "The way I figure they got all that information was from
local newspapers in America. Stories about going into pilots school, or when
you finally got your wings, or gunnery school, that information came into
the papers and was clipped out and that information went to German
intelligence. Why, they knew everybody. I talked to an officer that was
there, the only question they asked him was about a change in chaplains, who
was the new one."

Stalag Luft l

"The way I happened to arrive at Stalag Luft 1, which was strictly for
officers, they asked for volunteers to go to sergeants camp or Officers camp
If we wanted to pull KP duty. (Under the rules of war the officers didn't
have to work.) I told my buddy, the boy that was with me when we got out of
solitary, to go up and volunteer "Everywhere that I'd been before in the
armed service, the officers got a better deal than the enlisted men, and I
was going to go up."

The prisoners were shipped north through Germany in boxcars which were
hooked on to regular freight trains. "The train made stops at all kind of
stations and at a stop they'd feed us a stew of some kind." As they passed
through Stuttgart and Berlin, Moberly observed that these cities were
"pretty well bombed out." On the afternoon of April 1, 1944, Moberly and 300
other prisoners from the same bombing raid arrived at the prisoner of war
camp at Barth, Germany. Barth was on the Baltic Sea - low, marshy country
and only 60 miles across the water from Sweden.

The camp contained 10,000 PQWs, all airmen. Besides Americans, there were
British. Australians and New Zealanders. and men of many other nationalities
who were serving in the British forces.

"Part of the German officers in command of the camp spoke fluent English.
We had one captain who was a graduate of VMI he knew more about the American
Army than I did. The prisoners were organized into groups, squadrons, etc.
and the senior Allied officer was in charge of internal affairs at the camp.

which was divided into sections of 1,000 to 1,500 men. The entire camp
was one mile long.

All during the summer they were continually bringing in new prisoners
from the 463rd bomber group and we got news." Moberly said he learned that
the tailgunner on their ill-fated mission had made contact with Yugoslav
partisans and had made it back to Foggia.

"We knew everything that was going on outside," Moberly said. "We even
got a paper every day. We had an international news correspondent, Lowell
Bennett, in the camp. He went on a bombing raid and got shot down. He could
speak five or six languages, and Bennett would listen to the radio (we had a
radio, nobody but the command knew who had it) and write a story on the
progress of the war .

"They typed it up, about two pages, and when we'd get the copy we would
take it through all the barracks, every room. The last room would burn it.
There were 24 men to a room, a room about 14xlOx12, with six 3~tier bunks
and three double bunks.

"We knew about June 6, (D- Day} before it was announced in the U.S". Of
course the navigators knew maps. They drew a map of the whole ETO with pins
and a string on it and pinpointed the line as to where the BBC said it was,
and as to where the Germans said it was. When his plane went down, Moberly's
parents got word that he was missing in action. On July I, they learned he
was in the German prison camp and his father wrote to him immediately.

However, he didn't get that letter until November (he still has the
letter .) "I had been writing them as quick as I got there. Letter writing
was allowed two or three times a month." Outgoing and incoming mail was
censored. That first letter was brief, among other things his father
mentioned that 'I was over at Louisville the other day and sold the wool for
49 cents'.

On arriving at Barth, Moberly lived in a compound of 1500 to 2000
prisoners. We had a mess hall, and I worked in it eight or ten months. We
had two meals a day; a bowl of barley that made a fair cereal, two slices of
black bread, sometimes jam made from beets. In the evening we had a stew of
potatoes.

The men got Red Cross parcels, at first one parcel per man. "You'd get by
pretty good Eight ounces of sugar, salt and pepper, Spam, can of milk,
peanut butter, four or five packs of cigarettes, You could trade cigarettes
for potatoes. They had an economic system based on cigarettes. You could go
to the food storeroom with a pack of cigarettes and buy something."

The prisoners did their own cooking. But as the war went on, the Germans
ran out of potatoes and the Red Cross parcels no longer were one to a
prisoner but one to four men, then six, finally 24 men to a parcel.

"Then nothing. The Germans said they couldn't get 'em through."

In his free time (if one can speak of a prisoner having free time),
Moberly said he read "rather prolifically" in the library provide by the Red
Cross. There were also basketball courts and a football area.

There were many escape attempts, and Moberly helped dig some of more than
1,200 tunnels that the Barth POWs started in the deep sand of the Baltic
coastal area.

"They got five or six men out, but we were so far inland you had to go
all the way through Germany and then through the American lines. "Some tried
to escape by going down the coast to a boat 'going to Sweden (a neutral
country), but they'd get captured and in six to eight weeks they'd be
brought back to Barth." Moberly said there was plenty of talent among the
prisoners, who could take a British uniform and convert it into a regular
suit for an escapee. They could also make fake German passports.

By April 1945, the POWs knew that the Third Reich was very near collapse.
Moberly told one of the guards in the mess hall, who wasn't too friendly,
"Russians in Berlin, Germany is.kaput ." Before the Germans could evacuate
the huge camp, the advancing Russian army cut the Barth peninsula in two.
"On the night of April 30 we woke up and the Germans were gone and had
turned the keys over to the American commanding officer. On May 1, Russian
reconnaissance tanks came in with Russian officers. Next day they came in,
in force. They had some American trucks, but their artillery was drawn by
horses. They lived off the land, didn't carry supplies with them.

"They brought in cattle and hogs from the countryside, and the Americans
slaughtered them and we had fresh meat. The Germans had left behind 700 or
800 bushels of potatoes." On May 8 the camp learned of the German surrender
the day before, and celebrated VE Day. It was May 12 before they started
leaving Barth, however, because the Russians had to have a list of every
prisoner's name, which had to be translated. On May 15 and 16, 40 aircraft
airlifted prisoners to France, where they were taken to the port of
Cherbourg. Moberly said he was in reasonably good health when he was
released and weighed about 150, down 25 or 30 pounds from his normal weight.
On June 26, 1945 he arrived by ship at Newport News, Va., and was sent to
Camp Atterbury , Ind., where he got a 30-day furlough. He took a Greyhound
bus home. The route ran on US 25 to London, so Moberly could get off right
at the family farm. His mother, father and youngest brother were there to
meet him. Two other brothers were still overseas, one in Casablanca and One
in Italy.

He got two extensions on his leave before returning to active duty. On
November 30, 1945, Moberly was discharged, and the following January he
entered the University of Kentucky. He says he knew while still in prison
camp that he would go to school when be got back to the States. He had
wanted to be a lawyer since he was in the eighth grade.

Two years later, while still in law school, Moberly was elected to the
state legislature and served in the 1948 session and the 1949 special
session. In that year he finished law school and passed the bar examination.
He decided to practice in London.

"I was born and raised here. 1 thought it was a pretty good place to
live." Moberly practices general law, specializing in workman's
compensation, negligence and social security cases. He was county attorney
for 16 years, and is now U.S. magistrate for eastern Kentucky.

He is married to the former Geneva Pennington of London, and the couple
has a son, Charles, who is in the personnel department at FlavoRich; a
daughter, Nancy is a lawyer in northern Kentucky, and a daughter, Susan who
teaches at Lafayette High School, Lexington.

Seated in his Broad Street office today, Coleman Moberly remembers
clearly that tenth of May 39 years ago in eastern Kentucky …free after more
than a year of captivity, the war in Europe over, waiting to come home to
Laurel county.